MS 40 rn oni ALLIES ADVANCE TOWARD PEKING.| STARTED THURSDAY. Imperial Edict Directs Free Communication and Departure From Peking — Relief Column Comprises 46,060 Men. Severe storm kingdom. Honduras declines to killing of Frank Pears South an ¢ ces Powell's sttertion at ical. ant to be one F LATEST NEWS NOTES. raging over the unite settle say ii tenberg 1s crit- Paris police discover the shah’s assail- ncois Salson, The war department Tuesday even- workingmar ing received two dispatches from China. Three persons are dead and The first read: “Che Foo, (undated.) riously ill from eating toadsto Tien Tsin, Friday. Message just re- Chicago, Ill : ceived from Conger says since 16th, by ais g : Kaiser Wilhelm and Cc agreement, no firing. Have provision several weeks, little ammunition, al safe, well. I (Daggett) report allie: forces soon advance. Practically nc looting by Americans, no killing. Indiana arrived 26th. MacCann, Sladen, both Allens, unnecessary Order Mitchell, E s 1 |low are at variance over 1] icy in China. > Col. Henry C. Cochrane pointed commander of marines in China precauti nn, e 01 Bryce join regiment here. (Signed) {just now rd Presid Dagee : against 1 S [+ > 1 , Tlint he Foo, n Tsin, Monday. Flint in ] yunt von Bue- Germany's pol- on trial in Missouri a French TWENTY-FIVE INJURED. for the Baden- | Windy City Anarchists in Collision With Sorry Results to Themselves —Lucy Parsons and Four Gihers Arrested. At Chicago an anarchist riot occurred four se- | Sunday near afternoon, in which 25 people were bruised in a struggle with 45 police summoned to quell the disturbance. Five persons were arrested, among them ols, being Mrs. Lucy Parsons, widow of Alexander R. Parsons, who was exc- cuted November 11, 1887, in Chicago for aiding and abetting the bomb-throwing in the Haymarket riot. She was charg- ns are taken}ed with disorderly conduct, obstructing ent McKinley | the street and resisting an officer. Her bail was fixed at $1.100. A mass meeting has been called at shire arrived Friday. Two hundred and |; the niarde ilbert Gates 30 years | Westside Turner hall at which speeches fifty-seven Ninth infantry sick, 10 doc- ago, was acqn were to be made by Mrs. Parsons anc tors, 100 hospital corps men, 20 signal °F . ah drivers in on the topic “The Execution of men needed. Unavoidabie delay un-|, our thousand « th driy 1 rent for | the King of Italy.” The call concluded: loading transports. < reign troops ar- aye A I o ower Tie oy 7e “Workmen, come in crowds and show riving. (Signed) “Daggett.” the vehicles they gnve that the feeling of brotherhood is strong The allies began the advance from In a fire at Buffalo two firemen were | ong vou.” Tien Tsin this morning, announces a injure and seven buildings destroyed, After the affray numerous small cards bulletin dated at Shanghai at 11:10 a. entailing 0ss Ot $150,000. were found on the street and in the vi- m., Wednesday They are 18 miles from Bishop Ignatius ¥. Horstman, of the cinity containing two verses of poetry, Tien Tsin and should reach Pekin in| Cleveland Catholic dioc is seriously urging the workingman to be free, to cight day 3, All the Europeans have {ill at his home in Ci i throw off the yoke of bondage and fight taken refuge in the inner inclosure of A telegram from Cape Nome states | for liberty, and to lay down their lives, the imperial city. It is assumed that that health conditions. are improving | if neccessary, to overthrow the govern- the Americans, British and Japanese and smallpox is on the decrease. | ment and attain freedom. The card are taking part in this forward move re .r i bore the heading: “Workingmen! ment, whether other nationalities are Driver boys employed in a mine nea Emancipate yourselves.” or not An advance base will probably Wilkesbarre, Pa., struck because one large quantity of literature advo- be established 20 or 30 miles nearer Pe- | ©f their number was discharged cating Ai and Dorr inate kin, and supplies will be assembled The main grievance of W Setmorciand the names and addresses of several hun- preparatory to a direct stroke at the cap- | county, Pa. lt: a 15 Stil dred anarchist sympathizers, were se- ital. Of the 60,000 allies debarked at {to be the closing of their spc ak-easics. cured by the police Pechili.ports, English mi tary observer Saturd a baseball struck William ee Sorsidss i Soom Se Sallie for an M. Snyder, catcher of the Homewood, COMMISSION READY. Chi lo : a., team, over the heart and killed him. CRE « ar agains 2 : orgs the A a To 7 is n Bawa jous Gore, 3 fed wit 5 Judge Taft and Colleagues Will Soon Begin A - Factor o LOndon, 1as 1auec =~ Sheng, the director of railroads and tele 500,000 liabilities and only $235,000 as- Legislation in Phi‘ippines. graphs, and Lin-Kun-Yi. the Nanking. They ers that the ministers are held as host ages and that they will be killed if the allies march to Peking. viceroy This information comes thre ugh press dispatches. The official information was have notified the Pow- sets. riously injured by Edward L. Dwyer, One man was killed and another se- an explosion in the Alpha cement works ncar Phillipsburg, i. 1 once a millionaire On September 1 the commission Judge Taft will become the legislative body of the Philippines, with power to take and appropriate insular moneys, to establish judicial and educa- stems, headed by tional sy «nd to make and pass all contained in a message from Consul and financial promoter , enlisted at Har- faws Fowler, of Chefoo. to Washington, who risburg, Pa. as a private in the marine No money will be permitted to be reported that Li-Hung-Chang had toid | service. drawn from the inswlar finds except by TL ue men ne Te Consul Fowler at Chefu verified the jauthorization of the commission. Judge because the allies are adv ancing oy Pe genuineness of the Conger message of | Tat and his colleagues will also exercise king. The vicero i ident! July 18 by securing the original copy jcertain executive functions, For ceroy was evidently more |. 0 Peking. stance, they will appoint judges, official cautious than his friends. the viceroy of £ : . th C 1d nd offi Nanking and the director of railways Rear Admiral Schley is likely to be a the Se aise paring nh Tk and telegrapl 3 ent to Honduras with a gunboat to col- cers of Bei ; in 5 1ch Jat com- heng, director general of railw: lect the $10,000, the Pears claim, from 5 sion ni Sst 4 1 pe ndings ections. and telegraphs, has just communicat: that government. zenera acArthur will be the execu- to the consnls at Shanghai. ac to a special dispatch from Paris, date Sunday, an imverial decree, date T hursday, authorizing the foreign min 1sters in Peking to communicate with out restriction with their governments and ordering their departure for Tier Tsin under a good escort The American and British forces be gan the advance on >cking last Thurs oe according to a dispatch from Tien Tsin to London. “The main body © the allies,” continues the corres “marched July 30. General “paffec was delayed by difficulties of disemdark- ation. General Dorward, the Britis! commander, had no stich obstacles , anc his delay is inexplicable. “The other foreign troops are now half way to Lofa. The force include 20,000 Japanese under General Yama chuchi and 10,000 Russians. The Brit ish force totals 0,000, and the other for cign troops are 7,000. artillery. A DECADE’S DEVELOPMENT. Growth of the Manufacturing Industries in the United States. The development of the manufactur ing industries of the United States dur ing the past decade, and especially dur- ing the second half of the dec: ade, is il- lustrated by the completed figures o the treasury bureau of statistics showing the imports of manufacturers’ material. and exports of finished manufactures i cording pondent, We are weak in Dodie’s Zion disciples from Ch tive head to enforce the laws of the com- 1 mission and he wil ndu 1e goveri- 1| were prevented by mob and police from ind he ill cond ct the g i ) x 3 Se ment im accordance with the same un 1 j landing at Mansfield, Ohio, and returned 1 . ; to the Windy Ci til the commission recommends to Pres- o the indy > : we . . s ident McKin the appointment of a A Russian consul is authority for the | (ivi governor. statement that the empress dowager had The only three banks in Manila have all Rus 11 ordered the extermination of formed a ring to reduce, arbitrarily and sians in the north without justification, the rate of ex- A Mifflin county squatter was jailed | change for American gold. This has in Harrisburg, Pa.. for making threats | can d widespread indignation and many 1 {against the life of State Forestry Com- | difficulties for commerce and minor bus 'f| missioner Rothrock. iness. The banks, however, are obdu- Expert Edgar's audit of the books of | rate. Blevins, the murdered city treasurer of rT New Castle, is completed and shows a PRISONERS ALL KILLED. 1 ' : 1 | shortage of Earl Troutman, an Ak was shot while t s jorchard. William Carmic arrested. $70,020.10. ron, picking up apples in an hael, GS. hoe Wounded Chinamen Dispatched by Allied o a Soldiers With the Bayonet. owner of Lieutenant von Krohn, of the German 2 the plrce, was : 5 army, who arrived at Yokohama, T Hy ee 2 Wear Ne ag Creek W ednesday in company with 300 wound- shaft, near Scranton, Pa, it was de-|¢d and incapacitated Germans and oth- cided to return to work. crs on the stea mer Korn, just before The Earl of Minto, governor general the Glenogle sailed, told of his ex- of C 2 Ba ith Lady Minto, pe jehices n Seymour in his ceiving marked honors in their journey Attempt to co : : through British Columbia : : Asked why y e did with their women and old men, Lieutenant von Joseph Toad, who Was rohn said they emigrated with all - | explosion at the Alpha Portland speed, but if this was not possible, as in _| Works at Easton Thursday, di e case of one village taken by the making the second victim. i; allies, they cut off the heads of the wo- Citizens of Armstrong, Il, det ind dren and threw them in i burglars blowing up the safe of the the ver. town's only bank and a pitched battle Lieutenant von Krohn was asked ensued, in which the thieves escaped. about the statement of a German that Nc 1 Providence, R. 1, workmen | the s had dispatched the wound- the fiscal rs 1890, 1805 and 1900, | found the body of a man pinned by lum- | ed with the butts of their rifles. He From 1890 to 1803, importations of man ber in a « and he is supposed to be f said it was not quite so bad as that, but ufacturers’ materials increased $0.04 Arthur McCleary, of Atlantic City | under the circumstances they had been and from 1895 (0 1900, they inc Three persons were seriously injured | probably would in the future be $114,781,363. From 1300 to 1805, and six others hurt when five heavy | d to kill wounded prisoners exports of manufactures increased $ pieces of structural iron fell from the | ¢ bayonet. They found ou thal 493,367; from 1805 to 1900, they a top of a 12-story building in New York. as a man was able to raise a ed $248.688,623. Manufacturers’ ma- A hitch has occurred in the million fan he ®oud iy to sta ab the foreign- terials formed in 1800 23.06 per cent. | dollar coal deal in Washington and crs. 1¢ allies soon gave orders to kill of the total imports, in 1805, 23.64 per] Greene counties, Pa., validity of the ha Syew Chinese whe cold stand. cent., and in 1900, 57 per cent; fin- {tions Being gue stoned. ished manufactures formed in 1800 17.87 per cent. of the exports, in 1895, 23.14 per cent, and in 1900, 31.54 per cent. TEN THOUSAND SLAIN. Jug » review of the ey} A Christian Chinese Town Annihilated by Im- | Union coal miners in : i side the mines controlled perial Troops From Pekin. Four” Company, will, Telegrams from London, dated | tember 1, receive an advance in Thursday, say: Cable dispatches from | of 10 per cent. Chefu announce that the imperial Chi-} nese troops advancing to oppose the re- lief force have completely tians. Gen. Gaselee was strongly opposed to an immediate advance of the allied army, but he was overruled by the other commanders and influe wiped out a Christian town near Peking, killing five foreign priests and 10,000 native Chris- Maj. Smith, the Seventy-first Jew Y Goeb In the day Rev ! in-law, Golden, had said each conviction. Noble Drum," a 12-yea Fraseyburg, O., hanged rents had each remarried who was dismissed from regiment for cowardice at San Juan hill, is seek- ork RUIN BY A TORNADO. Crops Destroyed and Cattle Killed in North Dakota. dence against A tornado, accompanied by a terrific Mino out- hail and rainstorm, started near Thomp- by the beginning Sep murder trial Wednes- Ao Stamper said his brother- he we $5,000 for his confession and $2,000 for r-old himself in a smoke house because his separated pa- and 1 Big son, N. D,, at 7 o'clock Saturday morn- ing and swept to the northwest through a rich farming country and many thriv- ing settlements, across into Minnesota, where it spent its fury in the Red Lake - Indian Reservation. 1S to get A strip of country v arying from eight to ten miles in width and 100 miles in length was torn by the furious winds. Houses were partially wrecked and hun- dreds of barns were torn to pieces. The remainder of the wheat and oat crops, which were about half harvested, wa boy of 1is home REDS RIOT WITH CHICAGO POLICE! REBELS MORE ACTIVE. Filipinos Capture Two Small Ameriean De- tachments and Cause Trouble—Na- tive Police Captain Killed. There has been an increase of insur- gent activity during the last three weeks, especially in the w attacks upon small parties. »f ambushes and First Lien tenant Alstaetter, of the engincer corps. with an escort of fifteen men, was taken in ambush in the province of Nueva “cija, Luzon, by a large force. The Americans fought until their ammuni- tion was gone; and, as they were sur- rounded, there was nothing to do but surrender. One man was killed 1 three were wounded. Lieutenant Bocton Hulesberg was ambushed and kiiled near es Cruz, province of Laguna. Five men of the fourth infantry ‘were captured in N “cija; but Sergeant Schmidt, of the Twelfth infantry, v men, teafied the captors and kill Captain Lara, of the Manila native po- lice was dangerously shot by an 1 He enforcing regula- known assailant while on the street. had been effectively tions and had made enemies among the Filipinos. some of whom ave long threatened vengeance. Lara had been generally accused of ruption in office and specific ch s were filed gainst him by an officer. TWENTY- SEVEN INJURED. A Gas Explosion Tatses Heavy Damage in Scranton, Pa. Twenty-seven people were injured by a terrific which $250,000 worth of property on the princi- explosion destroyed pal business street of Scranton, Pa., Saturday night. How many are killed and buried beneath thousands of tons of debris cannot be stated at this time. Three buildings on Lackawanna ave- nue are demolished, and fully twenty more are badly wrecked. A leak in a gas pipe in the cellar of the bank was responsible for the explosion. The jan- itor detected the odor of gas when he returned from supper, and after tele- phoning for a plumber thought to make an investigation, and, going into the cellar, struck a match. He was picket up unconscious in the alley in the rear of the bank. When the crash came the avenue was crowded and a number of the injured were walking by, while others were caught while passing up Lackaw: mana avenue in an open car bound for Pitts- ton. How those who were canght while passing in front of the building escaped instant death is beyond compre hensions, as the street was a heap of debri The whole city was shaken by the explosion, which was terrific, the force of the concussion being heard many miles away. All the ambulances were kept so busy that stretchers were utilized and the vie tims of the horrible explosion were placed in the fire wagons and removed to the hospital. Carriages were also used to remove some who had esc: aped serious injury and the scene was one of the busiest Scranton has ever seen Not a few of the rc SCuers were overcome WW aping gas and as quickly as they collapsed they were taken to the hos spi- tals. ISLANDS CEDED TO UNCLE SAM. Twenty-Two Samoan Chiefs Sign the Papers and Become U. S. Gfficers. Commander Benjamin FT. Tilley, in charge of the United States naval sta- tion on the island of Tutuila, Samoa, transmits in a recent report to the navy department an “instrument of ce executed by the chiefs of Tutuila and the United States government. The cession was signed by the chiefs, April 17, immediately prior to the sion, raising of the stars and stripes over the naval station at Pago-Pago. The chiefs are entitled to retain their individual control of the separate towns, provided the same shall be in accord- ance with the laws of the United States concerning Tutuila. It provides that this government shall re spect protect the individual rights of the peo ple to their land and property, and that should the government require their lands, it shall take the same on pay- ment of a fair consideration. BIG DEMOCRATIC VICTORY. Is also Their Majority in North Carolina is Nearly 60,000—Will Control Legislature. Democratic majorities in North Caro- lina’s election aggregate 64,678 and the fusion majoriti making the net Democratic major: 50,553. The will be contests in several counties, regularities being charged in R: andolph, Harnett, Wilkes and Chatham counties n the latter county, Congressman At. water's precinct, the fusionists are charg- To ed with having burned the ballots. the Senate, there were elected 38 De mo crats and nine Te with three seats doubtful, and to the House 0 Democrats and 13 fusionists. while 13 seats are in donbt. There will | se only two Populists in ii Legislature, both from Senator Butler's county. ——" Strikers Blow Up a House. a There w ed OF Wash ! > 2 was re desertions from the ranks ) : ‘as w 1either. c . 2 5 : ing! orders Gen. Chaffee to “Pro. | 2 vith 1 : pounded into the ground by the hail. of the striking coal miners in the u hout an instant's delay.” It has developed th at the three mem- Fortunately no persons were killed G Crock distil A os 0 2 res Creek distric rsdav - fom Shanghai, the Daily Express bers of the Jorris family of Harvey, Ill. | outright, although many received in- on feo 7 istrict, Md., Thursday, has reccived confirmation of the Teport- who died Thursday, were poisoned by [juries which will undoubtedly résult in |? ie a0 Je ying ee to work ed murder of 50 missionaries in the | Mushrooms, which had been inoculated | death. No estimate of the financial loss in the vario b punes _Soveral tases of tS a by 2 small hlack bag. is possible. minor disturbances hay e taken place, province o 1an Si, with the additional | P) - Virited 5 asl Se the most scrions being in Frostburg confirmation that eight English wo A train bearing United States Consul % J ! c La Sr by : : | : i where the house of an anti-stril 1 men were dragged out of the mission | Stowe was derailed and burned by the Kit od by Rough Riders. named Powell, was blown up ie Ei | ; > 3 . J ‘ , was a- buildings by a Chinese mob. who be- Boers near Kroonstad. No one was At Marion, Ky., C. C. Wheeler, of a mite. None of his family was injured headed them in the streets of Chu Chou. | injured. Some prisoners were ta prominent Kentucky family, was shot | The temper of the miners who are till = but afterward released. oy Ne 1 i ar : : in jand clubbed to death by the rough rid-| out is growing steadily uglier, and a Gas Near Williamsport. Michael Bonning, of Connellsville, | E f 2 ho: f serious outbreak mi: at any min- Natural gas in .paying quantities has | Pa., is the champion raw egg eater of [ers of Buckskin Bill's Wild West show { ute, though Martin is ‘taking been struck within 20 miles of Will- | Fayette county. His latest achievement | Saturday. During the day there had every precaution to guard against it. 2 iamsport, Pa., and great excitement pre- | was to swallow two doz n uncooked |Peen trouble between the showmen and ’ Ltd E vails in that section. The Pint Creek |cggs in eight minutes. J ole ped oni ig Balance of $5.712.846.82. Oil and Gas Company is drilling for oil When David MeN attempted (0 | OC" aay it i t the depot he met 20 of The balance in the ly 8 Waterville and Saturday at a depth | strike his widowed with ene posh oh oe 1 ] by bl 114 : P i Sta ee of 700 eet a great gasser was struck. | near Worcester, Mass., the wom { were 1ollowed by blows, and |(he Pennsylvania State tre: it the | near y ' 1 The gas is now under control and the | : Iver fir her hand! |v began to pl A rescuing | f 1 Tu y 1 3 1 a led a revolver from her handbag and | " 4 S close of business Tuesday was drill Ts being drtes deeper one el ot Ls Deore: ad { par tv fc nd Wheeler 50 yards from the The sruit 1a the sett ground. The farmers in the vicini fi : . . { on with three gunshot wound Bein e sit 12 fund ! 1c farmers 1 1€ vicinity of! oionel 1. ynch, of the Irish brig: } ' 0.8 The « 1 f Waterville who did not have the capi ne 5h of fish RB h his body and a cked skull } 140.54 he io cipt Ss of the ? : : t have the capi-|;, a viewed in Paris, says the Boer ol : reasury for July were $1.5 : intervt yockets - ore asur Th tal to spend in drilling are highly elated | Og els were empty. cven of the 1 £ still full of fight and may continue wmen 1 1 + al yecelnts from all sources from No and will soon be made independent! yi e } men have been arrested. | f : he li I \ VY war for months. Over 3.000 Boers | ids — , the c of the last fiscal fick port ¢ Bas > 2 be d to a I- urrendered to the British lately Bo'd Train Robbery. Wednesday amomnt to $12. Spo soon as another we OF oii: : wv re 1s due the c¢ ] = ot : ; ale 3 ; . a ¢ h ommon- equal pressure is drilled. Drilling for | Fete dc Bi ule, an Indian or < Tiion Pacific oF oil at 3 and in Sullivan cou ii : i | Barriere, is being sought by Ot | { Dion Pacific Dassens h on settlements from corporations be started } mHivan county Will | Can. authorities because of the { which Ie ’ Denver Satur { about $800.000 e shart once on | which has just reached there of Id up about 1 a. m. by two men severa EE Feud Claims F i brutal murder of his uncle, his wife anc d | miles west of Hugo, Col. The passen Fanatics in Peru. F led ur ves. | baby gers in the Pullman sleepers w zal The celebrated convent of Ocopa, at our men killed and one fatally | — bed of their money and valuable An | P hic : ! 1 wounded the outcome of a shooting | [ol toon We TT iL dima, Peru, which had been partially affair be en William Dooley and his | CABLE FLASHES. | California refused to Sarrend ler his val- ae Jao d by i370 fives, balioved in he ot four sons on one side | a bis re S Vi mcendiary ongm com letely de- oy W n one j ide, and the four Har- | uables and fired a shot at one of the |. d We a re i : om ro! ievs on fe other, as 2 result of | Italian police discover a plot to assas- | robbers, but missed. The reupon the| oe are the 2ud, 2 Oe u » + 1 Et « > 3 oud, 4 63 Fran n, Sus of t 3 mining { 5inate several monarchs. robbers fired, killing y instantly. The peasantry to the propaganda of s cois county o. ; : bed the 0h A : as: 3 « ganda of A few day o the Horris boys sont | Italian ministry issues a manifesto to | hers 3 1 ed the train, jumped off | cap missionaries, there is great word to the Poot vs that they would be 2 Filling eople asking loyalty to the new | a" aped.. 0 ment among the more fanatic 1 yond the control ) or at a picnic at Doe Run, and intended to | he . oo Mine Yeon: Aednced. beyon 2 ihe nie! of the Jy cal authori run the Doolevs off the grounds. Just | Bressi, the assassin of King Humbert Tho conl Alal i ties. sovernment troops have been how the shooting began is no {says he didn't kill Humbert; he killed he coal miners of Alabama have ac- | sent to the scene of dist irbance to main- not clear, but 15 1 1 1 i f 2! ts t t ler. once begun, it 1 deadly. he king cepted a reduction of 212 cents a ton |tain orde All the Harris 1 except one, Bi 4% ; Yio e ani from August 1. Under the contract that ae 4 a ¢ ) ill Unknown man, believed to be an 1 i aT 1, = { Town Guited by Fire. were shot. One killed instantly. | anarchist, attempts to assassinate the | Went into effect July 1 the maximum ah y Three of the Dooley boys. who were fshah of Persia price to be paid for digging coal is to A large part of the business section of unhurt, gave themselves up. They arc : be 55 cents a ton with No. 1 foundry | Convoy, O., 20 mile of Fort : y as 1 disce ( a 7: ? g 3 in jail. | ha been discovered that the plot iron selling at $11 per ton. With each | Wayne, Ind, was oyed by fire —_— ! l Se Humbert of Italy originat- reduction of 50 cents a ton in the price | Wednesday morning. The loss will be New Oil Field Bowing. i biersca: : of iron the miners are to accept a re-|from $80,000 to $100.000. The burned Thorough development | I'he kaise speed hes hereafter are duc tion of 215 cents 2 ton. The coal buildings inc Ide the postoffice, the town for the Sandy A a » be edited at the foreign office Sot €{miners’ committee Saturday recom-}hall, the Columbian hotel, six store so many prominent oil it can be published mended the > reducti 100 buildings and a numbe residences daily. Indications point io Ea he Order of the Crown has been Ere The fire started in a blacksmith shop tensive operations oo week, and th conferred by Emperor William upon Japanese Minister Received. and spread with great r: pidity. long hoped for oil boom seems to | DT eee German ambassador} The new Japanese minister, Kogoro B ght L rch Ra to the 11t¢ States. ns . 5 . : EE ma Na Severn) I't : oo : ” is Jor : I'akahira, laid his credentials before the Sug t Hai of Brilish Loan. wells are now pumping from 10 to 20 : i Nic Eagan govern has Suit, President Friday. Secretary Hay es At New York it was reported in Wall barrels cach daily and many more are - the on intime Canal | corted him to White House, where | street Friday, - business hours, that drilling. Territory is hardly available | Opey 10: concession having ex-|fe was received by President. The | half the entire ue of £10,000000 of at any price. I rominent among thei pire more than two years ago. speeches did not contain any references [the British war loan had been underwrit operators are the Bricken - Oil Com- Fhe he ot commons in London to affairs in China. The President dwelt | ten in this country Of entire pany, of Cadiz, O., the Florence Oil has sanctioned a proposal to borrow] upon he Shimla material progress amount it was announced the it Company, West Virginia, and the) £ 13,000,000 as a war loan, or by means making Japan, while the minister !ooo will be used to defray Standard Oil Company, together with | of treasury or exchequer bonds for the spoke for an enlargement of the grow- | war expenses and the Pra Fini many companies of local origin. nation. ing interests of the two countries. the cost of the campaign in China. marks of 22g and | 14 to it. AMERICANS 0 ) GONTROL THE CANAL. CONCESSION PER PERPETUAL. Eyre-Cragin Syndicate of New York Will Construct the Nicaragua Waterway. Right to Police Country. John D. Crimmins, of the syndicate formed to construct an inter-oceanic canal through Nicaragua under the con- cession given by that government to Edward Eyre and Edward F. Cragin, the exis tence of which was proclaimed Friday by President Zelaya, says that he Sompany to construct the canal, or- ganized under the laws of New Jersey, ic proceed to carry out the terms of its contract without delay. The capital needed has been secured, and if the estimate of cost made for ils government is correct the canal can be built for the same money. and prob- ably for less. This estimate is about $130,000,000. Mr. Crimmins said that the company would prefer to have the government leave the matter in the goa pany’s hands, so as to permit a priva constructi n and operation of the cana al for the benefit of the whole world. He added that the syndicate had no desir wever, to embarrass the go svernment 1d would defér to its conception of policy. The route has not been selected and the company has liberty to choose any within the domain of Nicaragua. That preferred by this government would cer- tainly have preference. The probability is that the route will be that hitherto called the Nicaragua. Mr. Crimmins said: "Our concession is perpetual. It gives us the right to police the country for ten miles on either side of the cana fl, where- as by the maritime company’ S conc sion policing was to be done by Nicaragua government.” 5 the RACE WAR ENDS FATALLY. Trouble Has Been Brewing for Some Time. Police Kill a Negro. For several days past trouble has been brewing between the white and colored miners in Keystone, W. Va. and a number 2 conflicts have occurred as a result. Thursday half a dozen whites attacked a number of colored men and clubs were used freely for a time. Po- liceman Harry Messer attempted to quell a disturbance when John Lowrey, a burly negro, tried to slash the officer with a razor. The official opened fire on Lowrey and FY a bullet through his heart. le alse slightly injured two other negroes. The killing of Lowrey enraged the colored population more than ever, and oes had formed of doing Messer bodily harm lynching was threatened. Mess taken to a boarding house and a one n sturdy white citizens armed themselves with rifles and served notice on the dad negroes that a volley than 100 neg purpose in fact, Wa SOOn more for the SE be fired at the first man who crossed the street toward Messer's quar- ters. Friday morning the trouble had sub- sided very materially, but another out- break feared. More than half the population of Keystone is colored, the town treasurer's and clerk's offices be- ing occupied by negroes. A race war s thre atened. OVER Ai B! LLION nN GOLD. in This Country. the Mint egarding gold in this country, Director of Robertz said that the estimate ‘A country on the gold basis gets the share of the world’s gold which its pro- portion of the world’s business brings That share is controlled by the i of trade, not by governmental reg- lation. Our great gain in gold in re- ent years has come because we could use it, and our position in the world's trade has en: nabl ed us to command it.” Plague in London. The Marine hospital service has re- ceived the following Past Assistant nouncing the outbreak of plag ue in London: here have been four cases of plague, two deaths from plague, in Lon- don. Diagnosis confirmed by bacterio- logical examination. Do not think | there will be further spread.” telegram from Thomas an- the bubonic Surgeon and gives no details as to the origin of the nor whether they were on ship- board or within the city itself. The ma- rine hospital service authorities say the cas ers are ample, and they express con- CE that the disease is not likely to reach this countr Fought a Deadly Duel. Husband and wife fought a duel to the | death. That is the theory of the police { who found their dead bodies. W. Sinclair, aged 51 years, a fruit com- mission merchant, and his wife, Annie IZ., aged 32 years, were both found dead Robert Saturday night in the garden in front of their summer home at Green Tree station .on the Pennsylvania railroad, near Philadelphia, Pa., in each of their heads. The couple had frequently quarreled, and some time ago scparated. Las week the wife returned to her husband's house. Sinclair and his wife each car ried istol, for what reason no could out. with a bullet hole Train Caught by a Flood. Redmond, Orangeburg county, S. C. reports the extraordinary rainfall of one A passenger train het for was caught in the flood, the to the car floors. The high before and behind washed away and the ers were in peril for escued. passen- Fatal Political Dhpute. t. Michael Prince, of the Norfoik department, shot and" killed Charles Cannon, an oyster inspector, at Norfolk, Va., Friday morning in the custom house vard. Five shots were fired. A political quarrel caused the shooting, both being ln: Demo- crats, but of different factions. Prohibition Leaders Denounced. Atlantic conde The has severely y Ministerial med John G. Union Wool- 1c Prohibition candidate for President: Rev. Ds Swallow, of Harrisburg, and Homer Castle, of Pittsburg, for holding a political meeting last Sunday on ihe ocean pier and charging admission. Great Increase o Immigration. the increase in immigration at the New York port just tabulated show that in the fiscal year ended June 30 there arrived 341.711 im- migrants, which is the greatest number sin 1893. The greatest increase has been during the last three months. Figures concerning Yellow Fever in Tampa. Dr. J. Y. Porter, Florida .State health icer, has received from Dr. Weedon, at Tampa, a me Ye announcing two cases of yellow fever in that city, and hat he believes the infection to be gen- eral. It is believed the disease can he ronfined to Tampa. Mint Director Roberts’ Estimate of the Amount | the present stock of | on May 1 was $1,045,525,117. of which | 420,000,000 was supposed to be held | by the banks and trust companies and | in prevate hoards. It is estimated that $600,000 to $800,000 is carried abroad by travelers each year, and $3.500,000 | used in the industrial arts annually. Mr. Roberts said: | The dispatch from Surgeon Thomas | ins structions alre ady given to quarantine ! one | s | foot in a few hours. About Redmond | Mills bridges were washed away, as well as a large section of the Southern rail- the | eight hours until | NEGROES DISFRANCHISED. ! Their Vote No Longer Valid in North Caro- lina—Some Voted Against Them- selves—Electien Quiet. After one of the most bitterly contest ed campaigns ever known in the old North State, the Democrats and by “white supremacy” won Thursday a major- ity of about 40,000. Thursday's election disfranchised the negro and changed the State Legislature from its combination majority of Republicans and Popalins to straight Democratic, practically in- suring the defeat of Marion Butler for re-election as United States senator. The negroes, as a general thing, re- mained away from the polls. The elec- tion, unexpectedly, passed off without any trouble, excepting at a little town named Eaison. A fire there, which started in a drug store, wherein was kept the registration boo destroyed the apothecary’s shop, the work being .at- tributed by the Democrats to those op- posed to white rule. Bloodhounds were called out, but failed to find any trace of the alleged incendi ary. ‘he clection was for State officers, members of the Legislature and county offices and for an amendment to the State Constitution looking to a practical climination of the negro from politics, as its adoption disfranchises the bulk of the negro vote. By the greatest interest centered in the it over the amendment. Many ne Rroes s voted for the amendment. stone College at The faculty of Living- Salisbury, one of the most prominent negro educational in- stitutions in the South, voted for it. Spencer B. Adams, fusion nominee for governor, was dc by Charles R. Aycock, Democrat, and ‘all other Democratic candidates were elected. The Legislature is Democratic in both branches, INDUSTRIAL NOTES. A Weekly Review of the Hanpenings Throughe out the World of Labor in This and Other Counties. The mines of South Africa give work to between 60,000 and 70,000 men. North Carolina got along ail of last year, ending May 31, withont a strike. Nearly ail the striking fishermen on the Frazer river, B. C., have returned to work. Carroll D. Wright estimates 1,808,300 wage workers in labor or tions in the United Stat Employes of th vy Central Rail road ha asked for an increase wages of from five to fifteen per cent lwo hundred women a emplo as feeders in the press rooms of Government printing office at W ington The coal mines through Virginia are running at their illest capacity and still are unable to keep up with orders Is’ Union has bem vant Gi Association of Workingwome | the eight-hour system has beer | duced into the dry goods stores of | Boston. | Offcers oi | eration of 1. Colorado State are arranging to | amount of the bor { from the State a large and mineral land on which mines will | be opened on the co-operative plan Mortimer D Shaw nducied the telegrapl strike id | who was once « ne « of the nent la bor leaders of America, was buried in i Potter's Field in St. Louis, Mo, un | der the assumed name of Martin { Shaw. From an industrial point of view the i Flemish city of Ghent ranks first among | the communities of Belgium. Aros ling to the recent industrial census, pub [ lished by the ministry of industry and labor, Ghent has 42,338 workers, in cluding bosses, directors, employes i mechanics and laborers. After Ghent | comes Antwerp, with 40.416, followed vy | Liege, with 37.018, and Brussels Cente with 26.817 MINES AND MINERS. Five Thousand Tons of Ameri an Coai for Germany —Refrigeraling Machines in Deep Mines. | One of the unexpected uses of the re frigerating machine is found in mining Ar great depths or at comparative shallow depths in some mines w ary on | valuable veins of metal or coal | een ees because of the heat. But | engineers declare that with the use of modern refrigerating apparatus to cool | the air it will be possible to go several thousand feet lower in case a rich vein | of precious metal or even co anted the additional e pense i E Lawrence, of Philadelphia, I | eine of the largest individ ual bituminc | coal mine owners in the central par { the State, has just shipped from P} | delphia a cargo of 5.000 tons of coal to Germany and | couple | large contracts for Europe consumyp- | tion. In speaking of the growth of the | coal shipments from this country to urope he said: “Our trade with Eu rope in soit coal is no longer in the experimental stage. It has been proved within a few months that there is a rand future for it. On of the andi is the lack of American ships the coal nearly every- i wing to go in foreign botton ee I think the expanding coal | trade will do more th: almost any | other particular line to encourage the | building of more merchant freight ca American yards. The busine | can be relied on to constantly increase, | and as an cvidence of the need of on | coal on the other side many English | syndicates are now buying all tl | coal lands in the south they can get | hold of. Notwithstanding the high freight expense we can put the European markets at $1 than the home article.” The Ben Franklin Coal ( | which has begun operations at Pa., is pushing work as rapid} ble. Coal wo in proce tion on the 1 driving a coal across, riers in up ton lc per ompany, Fre S possi port, ss of erec and worl nad The men are kept en day A tramway to connect with the Butler branch has already been completed. When the coal works are finished the company will employ 50 men The concern is capitalized at $100,000. amples of Japanese ih have been sted by order of the war department, rd it is announced that the tests lemonstrated that this ER with the prodnct of mines, Japan being so near is probable that the quarter: partment in China and the I coal will find it cheaper to use Japanese coal than to import American so many thew sands miles across the Pacific oce The Hanna Coal Company is opening new mines on Jug Ri near the W E. R. R, in the lower end of Jeffer- son county, O., and will employ 500 miners. The worst tamin f modern times were the famine in Ireland mn 1846- 7 in which 1.000.000 1 Indian famine in 1 1.450,000 victims; the 1877, in which 500.000 people peris and the great famine in China in in which 9.886.000 died. On one of the Japanese r ways ter- racotta sleej are used. They are | far mere durable than those of wood. formed in Watertown, N. on a ba sis of hours from 7 a. m. to 7 p. m., and wages $1 to $5 week There are several furnaces in Scot- land that consume 100 to 150 tons of coal per week, waiting for striking | hands to return to work i | The iron and steel trust announces | | through President Gary, at Chicago, who speal $700,000,000, that big mills maj soon, making 150,000 men idle As a result of the efforts of the our coal in | aht. § OR. TALMAGE'S SUNDRY SERMON. AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE. Bubject: The Kind of Religion That the World Needs—Only That Which Comes Straight Down From ileaven Can Be of Benefit to Humanity. ; [Copyright 1800.1 Ww D. C.— From Norway, ASHINGTON, whe Jr. Talmage is now staying, he sends the following discourse, in which he shows that the world can never be bene- fited by a religion of human manufacture, which easily vields to onc’s surroundings, but must have a religion let down from heaven; text, Amos vii, 8: “And the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seest thou? And I said, A plumb line.” The solid masonry of the world has for me a fascination. Walk about ‘some of the triumphal arches and the cathedrals, 400 or 600 years old, and see them stand as erect as when they were builded. walls of great height, for centuries vot bending a quarter of an inch this way or that. “So greatly honored were the masons who builded these walls that they were free om taxation and called “free” masons. The trowel gets most of the credit for these buildings, and its clear ringing on stone and brick has sounded across the ages. But there is another implement of just as much importance as the trowel. and my recognizes it. Pricklayers and stonemasons and carpenters in the building otf walls use an instrument made of a cord, at the end of which a lump of lead is fastened. They drop it over the side of the wall, and. as the plummet nat- urally seeks the centre o vity in the earth, the workman discove where th: wall recedes and where it bulges out and just what is the perpendicular. Our text represents God as standing on the wall of character. which the Israelites had built, and in that way testing it. “An the Lord said unto me. Amos. what seest thou? And I said, A plumb line.” What the world wants is straight up and down religion. Much of the so-called piety of the day bends this way and that to suit the times. It is oblique, with a low Ji state of sentiment and morals. We have all been building a wall of character, and it is glaringly imperfect and needs re. construction. How shall it be brought into perpenc.cular? Only by the divine meas- urement. And the Lord said unto me, mos, w hat seest thou? And I said, A Fi line.’ The whole tendency of the times is to make us act by the standard of what oth- ers do. “e throw over the wall of our character the tangled plumb line of other lives and reject the infallible test which Amos saw. The question for me should not be what you think is right, but what God thinks is right. This perpetual refer- ence to the behavior of others, as though it decided anything but human fallibility, is a mistake as wide as the world. There | are 10,000 plamb lines in use, but only one | is true and exact, and that is the line of | God's eternal right. There is a mighty at- tempt being made to reconstruct and fix up the Ten Commandments. To many they seem too rigid. The tower of Pisa leans over ahent thirteen feet from the per pen- dicular, and people go thousands of mi its graceful inclination and to a by extra braces and various architec- fond contrivances, it is kept leaning from century to century. Why not have the ten granite blocks of Sinai set a little aslant? Why not have the pillar of gruth a lean- ing Lower? iv is not an ellij as good ware? Why is not an Da ol as straight up and down? | friends, we 1 ust have a standard. it be God's or man's? The divine plumb line needs to be thrown over all merchandise. Thousands of years ago Solomon discovered the tendency of buyers to depreciate goods. He saw a man beating down an article lower and lower, and saying it was not worth the price ‘asked, and when he had purchased | at the lowest point he told eve body | what a sharp bargain he had struck, and how he had outwitted the merchant. “It is naught, saith the buyer, but w hen he is gone hi s way, then he boasteth” (Prov- xx, 14). Society is so utterly askew in this matter that vou seldom find a sell- er asking the price that he expects to get, He puts on a or value than he expects to receive, knowing that he will have to drop. And when he wants fifty he says se venty five, and is he wants 2000 he asks 2500. “It 1s naught,” saith the buyer. 1s defective, the style of goods | SC ne Shall 1 “The fabric is poor. can get elsewhere a better ar- | ticle at a smaller pr 1t is out of fash- for, it 1s damaged, it will fade, it will not ear well.” After awhile the merchant, in overpersuasion or from desire to dis: pose of that particular stock of Sods, says, | “Well, take 1t at your own ie, the g | Dyer gocs home with light step and calls into his private office his confidential | friends and chuckles while he tells how | for half price he got the g00ds. In other | words, he lied and was proud of it | Nothing would make times so good and the earning of a livelihood so easy as the universal adoption of the law of right. Suspicion strikes through all bargain mak- ing. Men who sell know not whether they will ever get the money. Purchasers know | not whether the goods shipped will be ac- | cording to the sample. And what, with i the large number 0 clerks who are mak- | ing false entries and then abse onding and | the explosion of firms that fail for mill- | ions of dollars, honest men are at their wits’ ends to make a living. He who stands up amid all the pressure and does | rigat is accomplishing something toward the establishment of a high commercial prosperity. The pressure to do wrong is stronger from the fact that in our day the large business houses are swallowing u the smaller, the whales dining on Beton and minnows. The arge houses undersell the small ones because they buy in greater | quantities and at lower figures from the | producer. They can afford to make noth- ling or actually lose on some styles of | goods assured they can make it up on oth- rs. So a great dry goods joa roes out- side of its regular line and sells books at ost or less than cost, and 5 swamps | the bookseller, or the dry goods house sells bric-abrac at lowest figures, and that swamps the small dealer in bric-a-brac. | And the same thing goes on in other styles of merchandise, and the consequence is that all along the business streets of all our cities there are merchants of small Sn who are in terrific struggle to keep their heads above ater The ocean liners run down the New foundland fishing smacks. This i nothing against the man who has the big store, for every man has as large a store and as great a business as he can manage. o feel right and do right under pressure requires martyr grace, civine support, requires celestial re-en- forcement. Yet there are tens of thou- sands of such men getting splendily the ough. They sce others going up and | themselves going down, but they keep their patience and courage and their Ch | tian consistency, and after awhile their success will come. There is generally re- tribution in some form for greedine The owners of the big business will Te, and their boys will get possession of the busi- ness, and v th a cigar in their mouths and | full to the a with the best liquor and behind a pair of spanking bays they will | pass everything on the turnpike road to temporal and eter perdition. Then the busin will break a and the smaller dealers will have fair opportunity, or the | spirit of contentment and right feeling will take possession of the large firm, as re- | cently with a famous business honse, and rm will s “We have enough money all this requires | for all our needs and the nc of our children. Now let us dissolve business and make v for other men in the same nstead of being startled nt a soli- tary instance of magnimity it a cd a commen thing. I know of scores of great busin houses that have had their opportunity of vast accumulation and who | ought to quit. But perhaps for a of this generation the struggle of small | houses to keep alive under the overshadow- ing pressure of great houses will continue. | Therefore, taking things as they are, | will be wise to preserve your equilibrium | and your honesty and your faith and throw over all the counters and shelves and casks | the measuring line of divine right. “And | tae Tord said pis me. Amos, what seest thou? And I s A plumb line.” way we need to rectify our All sorts of religions are put- 1z forth their pretension. Some have a ritualistic religion, and their chief work with ghosts, and others a religion of political economy, proposing to put an end you < | to human misery by a new stvle of taxa- tion, and there is a humanitarian religion | that looks after the bodies of men and 5 soul look after itself, and there is ive religion that proposes to rec- hy enactment of better there is an aesthetic religion a y rules of exquisite taste would lift 1e heart out of its deformities, and reli- ms of ali sorts, religions by the peck, re- ons by the square foot and religions | the ton, all of them devices of {he des we ould take the heart away from * c | ' nan race, a “that is the up and down itfen in | which begins nesis and | | ends ith Yevelation. the reli ion of the skies, the old religion. the (God eiven reli- gion, the everlasting religion. which says, “Love God above all and your neighbor as =e yourself.” All reli ions hut one begin at Je wrong end of in the wrong place. he Bible religion, demands that we first get. right with God. It begins at the ton gr measures Boa while the other reli- gions begin at the bottom and try to measure u I want you to notice this fact, that when a man gives up the straight up and down religion of the Bible for any new- fangled religion it is generally to suit his sins. ou first hear of his change of reli- gon, and then vou hear of some swindle he has practiced in a special mining stock. telling some one if he will put in $10,000 he can take out $100,000, or he has sacri- ficed his integrity or plunged into irremed- jable worldliness. His sins are so broad he has to broaden his religion, and he be- comes a3 broad as temptation, as broad as the soul's darkness, as broad as hell. They want a religiyn that will allow them to keep their VE and then “at death say to them. “Well done. good and faithful ser- vant.” and that tells them. “All is well, — there in no hell.” What a glorious heaven they hold before us! Come, let us go in and see it. There are Herod and all the babes he massacred. There are Charles Guiteau and Robespierre. the feeder of the French guillotine, and all the liars. thieves, * house burne garroters, pickpockets and libertines of all the centu- ries. ev have all got crowns and thrones and harps and scepters. and when they chant they sing, “Thanksgiving and uwonor and glory and power to “the broad religion that lets us all into heaven with- out repentance and without faith in those humiliating dogmas of ecclesiastical old fogvism.” ’ My text gives me a grand opportunity of saying a useful word to all voung men who are now forming habits for a lifetime. Of what use to a stcnemason or a brick- laver is a plumb line? Why not build the wall by the unaided eye and hand? Be- cause they are insufficient. because if there be a deflection in the wall it cannot fur- ther on be corrected. Because, by the law of gravitation. a wall must be straight in order to be symmetrical and safe. / young man is in danger of getting a defect in his wall of character that may never be corrected. Hear it, men and bovs, women and girls, all the fun is on the side of right. Sin may seem attractive, but it is deathful, and like the manchineel, a tree whose dews are poisonous. The only genuine happiness is mn a Christian life. here they co, two brothers. The one was converted a vear ago in church one Sunday morning during prayer or sermon or hymn. No one knew it at the time. he persons on either side of him sus- pected nothing, but in that young man’s soul this process went on:“Lord, here I am. a voung man amid the tempta- tions of city life, and T am afraid to risk them alone. Come and be my pardon and my help. Save me from making the mis- take some of my comrades are making, and save me now.” And quicker than a flash God rolled heaven into his soul. le is just as jolly as he used to be, is jus! as brilliant as he used to be. He can sirike a ball or catch one as easily as before he was converted. With gun or fishing rod in this summer vacation he is just is skillful as before. The world is brighter to him than ever. He appreciates pictures. music, innocent hilarity. social life, good jokes and has plenty ‘of fun, glorious fun. But his brother is going down hill. In the morning his head aches from the ep pagne debauch. ¥verybody sees he is rapid descent. What cares he for oh or decency or the honor of his family name? Turned out of employment, de- pleted in health. cast down in spirits, the typhoid fever stril him in the smallest room on the fourth story of a fifth-rate hoarding house, cursing God and calling for his mother and fighting back demons from his dying pillow, which is besweated and torn to rags. He plunges out of this world, with the shriek of a destroyed spirit. God is now throwing that plumb line over this republic, and it is a solemn time with this nation, and whether we keep His Sabbaths or dishonor them, whether righteousness or iniquity dominate, whether we are Christian or infidel, whether we fulfill our mission or refuse, whether we are for God or against Him, will decide whether we Wl as a nation go on in higher and higher c: areer or go down in the same grave where Jabvlon and Nineveh and Thebes are sepulchered. “But.” say you, ‘if there be nothing but a plumb line, what can any of us do, for there is an old proverb which truthfully declares, ‘If the best man’s faults were written on his forehead, it would make him pull his hat over his eyes.” What shall we do when, according to Isaiah, ‘God shall lay judgment to the line and right- eousness the plummet? ” Ah, here is where the gospel comes in with a Saviour’'s righteousness to make up for our deficits. And while I see hanging on the wall a plumb line, I see also hang- ing there a cross. And while the one con- demns us, the other saves us, if only we will hold to it. nd here and now you may be set free with a more glorious liberty than Hamp- den or Sidney or Kosciusko ever fought or. Not out yonder or down there or 1 here, but just where you are you may get it. The invalid proprietress of a wealthy estate in Scotland visited the continent of Surope to get rid of her maladies, an she went to Baden-Baden, and tried those waters, and went to Carlsbad and tried those waters, and went to Homburg and “mw tried those waters, and instead of getting etter, she got worse, and in despair she said to a phys cian, ty At shall T do is Foply was: “Medicine can do Le You have only one chance, an that is ‘the waters of Pit Keathly, ‘Scot and.” s it possible?’ she replied. “Why, those waters are on my own es- tate.” She returned and drank of the fountain at her own gate, and in two months completely recovered. Oh aud diseased and sinning and dying, go trudging all the world ove ing her» and there relief for y aged spirit when close by and at your very feet and at the door of your heart, aye, within the ve estate of your own con- sciousness, the healing waters of eternal life may te had and Sh this very hour, this very minute? Blessed be God that over against the plumb line that Amos saw is the . through the emancipating power of which yor and 1 may live an liwe forever! On the Warpath. The military authorities at Oaxaca, Mexico, have received information that there has been fighting between the Maya Indians and the government troops in Yucatan for the last five days and that the rebels have been forced to abandon several of their strongest positions adjacent to the city of San- ta Cruz, where they have their head- quarters and tribal government. The Indians were taken by surprise several d ago by a force of about our discour- 2,000 government troops commanded by Gen. Brav 0, coming upon their right flank. After firing a few volleys the In- and then which they and great dians retreated a short distanc made a determined stand have held with persistence bravery. Coal Crashes Into a Car. Early Thursday morning, while the Steubenville express, on the Panhandle railroad, was passing Walkers Mills, three miles west of Carnegie, Pa., on its way to Pittsburg, a large quantity of coal broke loose from Boyd's tipple, on a bank high above the railroad, and came cr rashing down upon the rear car of the train. The windows of the car were smashed and the seats and aisles! filled with coal. Quite a number of passengers were injured. The fall of the coal is said to have been due to the breaking of the machinery used in hoist- ing it. United States Consul Dead. Teleerams from Caracas, Venezuela, say: Information has reached this place of the death of the United States consul at Barranquilla, Colombia, from cholera. The United States consular list gives the name of W. Irvin Shaw, of Pennsyl- vania, as consul at Barranquilla. Stuck to His Post. When it comes to a battle, a horse shows no fear of death, no sign of be- ing overcome by panic, in all the wild tumult of the battle’s roar. A horse in one of our batteries in the Murfrees- boro fight was hit by a piece of shell, which split his sknll so that one sida was loosened. The driver turned him loose, but when he saw the team he had worked with being driven back for ammunition he ran to his old place and galloped back with the rest. \V hen an officer pu shed him aside to have another horse put in, he gazed at the new one with a most sorrowful expression in his eyes. Then he seemed to re alize that the battle was no more for him, and ha walked awav ar 1 ay down and died. The officer declar foun it was a broken i that killed fn —Our Dumb Ani- nals, ¢ oe w Davi nonga years wilder the ne knew but he he loc: respec would lessen were n One two of a neigl over tl quest his rif] every | distanc Reac was in his you on the and gi was wl the al: dians off, tal fashio: they w death ¢ The | childre could, treat almost terrifie the pan walnut was th reach i about a did so. The I meanin as if th tenly cl to assu was the that th among made di selves. Morgan moves kept uy conclud ralnut At thi his nex but whe the Ind lim sa blazed ward o to displ ings. The s enough could re Eprang on the pose of could 11 This to his 1 POSSESS fend hi had gai made g but his who gi yards, ghe fug This 1 what m gentlem fis seve ed, he ( the onsl a tomal and bra The p In pra flourish while a edging « But Mor svith his fomaha Then he svard a nis gun Laneous The s apon th of the ft the bar two fing Witho Lached Alorgan grapple